Community Commentary -- Gerald Bradley
So, Byron De Arakal takes pleasure that, once again, Newport city
leadership -- in this case our good mayor, spits in the face of residents
who are concerned that Newport Beach is sailing an ill-advised course
(Between the Lines, “Real Leaders Don’t Wear Bedroom Slippers,” Feb. 13).
It’s so easy, isn’t it? To write off those who oppose pointless
overdevelopment as whiny trust-fund babies, wealthy newcomers, fueled by
their stock market earnings.
The mayor has it backward. Those of us who question and often oppose
pointless overdevelopment are not newcomers. We’re not all wealthy
either. But over the years we, the wealthy and the moderate, have dwelt
side by side and shaped a community. The old money that Mayor Tod
Ridgeway chooses to insult was worked for by the people who accumulated
it. They didn’t have a powerful stock market to speculate with. Rather,
they had hands, backbone, grit and a little bit of luck. And they built a
city: a desirable city, with character.
And that’s the rub here. Character. De Arakal makes fun of the “vocal
minority wishing the city back to the days when Bogey was hanging out at
the Bay Club.” What does he think Newport Beach is? What does Mayor
Ridgeway think it is? When Bogey was hanging out, the city at least had
some character and identity.
If I’m like most people I know around here, I’m not against
development, I’m against stupid, pointless, pretentious development at
the expense of Newport’s lengthy and historical heritage. I’ve asked this
question before: Does Newport not measure up somehow?
A good case in point would be this hotel they want to put on the
Balboa Peninsula. Why? It’s not enough to bulldoze and displace a noble,
long-standing neighborhood to erect a private commercial development, but
on top of that, this proposed “resort” is designed in “Mediterranean
Villa” style. Putting aside all other arguments against doing the project
at all, what in the world would be wrong with designing something that
fits? They could at least design it after the Girl Scout house they
intend to tear down.
Does Mystic Seaport, Conn., have this problem? How about Monterrey or,
for that matter, Dana Point, Carmel or Key West? I haven’t been to Genoa,
Italy, lately, but I don’t recall anything erected there resembling the
Cannery Restaurant or Cape Cod. What’s so frightening about being Newport
Beach?
I think what we, the “vocal minority” (and we’re not as minor as de
Arakal and the mayor may hope) are most afraid of is the loss of the
real, historical, enjoyable, pleasant, fun Newport Beach.
We’re tired of hearing so many quack the mantra about “quality of
life” only to turn around and support those projects that add to the
congestion and detract from the ambience (anybody seen the Balboa Bay
Club lately? Ugh), all under the guise of feeding the city’s tax base and
providing jobs. Of course, those jobs are filled by people who couldn’t
afford to live in Newport in 100 years, thereby adding more traffic.
All I am saying is that those of us who pay our taxes and mortgages to
live here kind of like things the way they were when we, the wealthy and
the moderate, chose to stay here. That’s what we’re paying for, and it is
an arrogant slap in the face for Ridgeway to imply that there’s something
wrong with us for trying to protect it.
* Gerald Bradley is a Newport Beach resident.
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